EU Fundamental Rights, EC Fundamental Freedoms and Private Law
Publication date
2006
Authors
Cherednychenko, O.O.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
DOI
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Abstract
Originally, private law was considered to be immune from the effect of fundamental
rights, the function of which was limited to being individual defenses against the
vigilant eye of the state. This traditional view, however, has been put under pressure as a
result of the growing effect of fundamental rights in private law, which makes it possible
to speak about the tendency towards the constitutionalization of private law. Although
until recently this tendency has primarily manifested itself in the national law of many EU
Member States as a result of the readiness of the domestic courts to grant effect to fundamental
rights embodied in national constitutions and international human rights instruments
in purely private law disputes, an interesting perspective on the issue is also
provided by EU law. The aim of this article is to trace in EU law the signs of the developments
which have been occurring in national legal systems with regard to the effect of
fundamental rights in private law, and, in the light of this, to outline possible directions
in the evolution of the relationship between private law, on the one hand, and EC fundamental
freedoms and EU fundamental rights, on the other, in the context of EU law.